and its totally not the girl with the pearl earring, that was a mew way of painting he tried later on
Four answers:
Richard M
2010-05-18 05:20:50 UTC
Here's some info that might help you....Enjoy.
Dutch genre painter, Johannes Vermeer, or Jan Vermeer van Delft, lived and worked in Delft. Though there are only some 35 to 40 paintings attributed to his hand they are some of the most superb paintings in the Western art world. Vermeer is among the greatest of Dutch artists of the 17th century, second only to Rembrandt. His paintings contain a poetic quality and mainly portray figures indoors. His early paintings portrayed biblical scenes and his later paintings were allegorical. Vermeer is best well known for his domestic scenes catching quiet moments of the middle class, typically with a female figure central to the composition.
Vermeer had some artistic recognition in his lifetime, though it was primarily in Delft and The Hague. After his death Vermeer’s fame turned to anonymity until his rediscovery in Thore Burger’s essay in the 19th century. Vermeer’s reputation has grown since that time and he is now known as one of the greatest painters of the Dutch Golden Age.
The Dutch Baroque artist Johannes Vermeer (1632 - 1675) is best known for his painting, "Girl With A Pearl Earring". Vermeer lived in the city of Delft
anonymous
2010-05-18 08:04:15 UTC
I'm not sure what you mean by "a new way of painting he tried later on." "The Art of Painting," which is probably his most important work, is approximately contemporary with "Girl With a Pearl Earring" and may be rather later.
We have very few Vermeers anyway, and they all fall into a relatively short time span as artists' careers go. His most important works cover about a 10-year period, from the late 1650's to the late 60's.
anonymous
2010-05-18 07:04:19 UTC
'The Art Of Painting'
In the work he mixes classical themes (the girl represents Clio the Muse of History) with comments on the politics of the day. See the wiki entry for the painting for more details.
There is also a good TV documentary about the painting from the series called The Secret Life of a Masterpiece: The Art of Painting.
smykowski
2016-10-02 01:35:29 UTC
Vermeer's paintings of portray is arguably his maximum serious artwork. that's believed to be a self-portrait (technically if no longer symbolically). the female pictured is Clio, the foundation of historic past as defined in Ripa's Iconologia. it relatively is the only Vermeer artwork the place we've documentation of its identify (no longer arbitrarily given by using curators, yet instead given by using the artist. this style of artwork made by using an artists, titled "the paintings of portray" featuring the artist himself (in spite of the actuality that we purely see his returned) portray the allegory of historic past is a minimum of a demonstration of the place paintings happens, and a remark on paintings (and the artist's) ability to flow beyond his very own time.
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